Advanced Tax Strategies For Inherited IRA's

 Inherited IRA’s can be tricky.  There are a lot of rules surrounding; 

  • Establishment and required minimum distribution (“RMD”) deadlines

  • Options available to spouse and non-spouse beneficiaries

  • Strategies for deferring required minimum distributions

  • Special 60 day rollover rules for inherited IRA’s

Establishment Deadline

If the decedent passed away prior to December 31, 2019, as a non-spouse beneficiary you have until December 31st of the year following the decedent’s death to establish an inherited IRA, rollover the balance into that IRA, and begin taking RMD’s based your life expectancy. If you miss that deadline, you are locked into distribution the full balance with a 10 year period.

If the decedent passed away January 1, 2020 or later, with limited exceptions, the inherited IRA rollover option with the stretch option is no longer available to non-spouse beneficiaries.

RMD Deadline - Decedent Passed Away Prior to 12/31/19

If you successfully establish an inherited IRA by the December 31st deadline, if you are non-spouse beneficiary, you will be required to start taking a “required minimum distribution” based on your own life expectancy in the calendar year following the decedent’s date of death.

Here is the most common RMD mistake that is made.  The beneficiary forgets to take an RMD from the IRA in the year that the decedent passes away.  If someone passes away toward the beginning of the year, there is a high likelihood that they did not take the RMD out of their IRA for that year. They are required to do so and the RMD amount is based on what the decedent was required to take for that calendar year, not based on the life expectancy of the beneficiary.  A lot of investment providers miss this and a lot of beneficiaries don’t know to ask this question.  The penalty?  A lovely 50% excise tax by the IRS on the amount that should have been taken.

Distribution Options Available To A Spouse

If you are the spouse of the decedent you have three distribution options available to you: 

  • Take a cash distribution

  • Rollover the balance to your own IRA

  • Rollover the balance to an Inherited IRA

Cash distributions are treated the same whether you are a spouse or non-spouse beneficiary. You incur income tax on the amounts distributed but you do not incur the 10% early withdrawal penalty regardless of age because it’s considered a “death distribution”.  For example, if the beneficiary is 50, normally if distributions are taken from a retirement account, they get hit with a 10% early withdrawal penalty for not being over the age of 59½.  For death distributions to beneficiaries, that 10% penalty is waived. 

#1 Mistake Made By Spouse Beneficiaries

This exemption of the 10% early withdrawal penalty leads me to the number one mistake that we see spouses make when choosing from the three distribution options listed above.   The spouse has a distribution option that is not available to non-spouse beneficiaries which is the ability to rollover the balance to their own IRA.  While this is typically viewed as the easiest option, in many cases, it is not the most ideal option.  If the spouse is under 59½, they rollover the balance to their own IRA, if for whatever reason they need to access the funds in that IRA, they will get hit with income taxes AND the 10% early withdrawal penalty because it’s now considered an “early distribution” from their own IRA. 

Myth: Spouse Beneficiaries Have To Take RMD’s From Inherited IRA’s

Most spouse beneficiaries make the mistake of thinking that by rolling over the balance to their own IRA instead of an Inherited IRA they can avoid the annual RMD requirement.  However, unlike non-spouse beneficiaries which are required to take taxable distributions each year, if you are the spouse of the decedent you do not have to take RMD’s from the inherited IRA unless your spouse would have been age 70 ½ if they were still alive.  Wait…..what?

Let me explain.  Let’s say there is a husband age 50 and a wife age 45. The husband passes away and the wife is the sole beneficiary of his retirement accounts.  If the wife rolls over the balance to an Inherited IRA, she will avoid taxes and penalties on the distribution, and she will not be required to take RMD’s from the inherited IRA for 20 years, which is the year that their deceased spouse would have turned age 70 ½.   This gives the wife access to the IRA if needed prior to age 59 ½ without incurring the 10% penalty.

Wait, It Gets Better......

But wait, since the wife was 5 years young than the husband, wouldn’t she have to start taking RMD’s 5 years sooner than if she just rolled over the balance to her own IRA?  If she keeps the balance in the Inherited IRA the answer is “Yes” but here is an IRA secret. At any time, a spouse beneficiary is allowed to rollover the balance in their inherited IRA to their own IRA.   So in the example above, the wife in year 19 could rollover the balance in the inherited IRA to her own IRA and avoid having to take RMD’s until she reaches age 70½.  The best of both worlds. 

Spouse Beneficiary Over Age 59½

If the spouse beneficiary is over the age of 59½ or you know with 100% certainty that the spouse will not need to access the IRA assets prior to age 59 ½ then you can simplify this process and just have them rollover the balance to their own IRA.  The 10% early withdrawal penalty will never be an issue. 

Non-Spouse Beneficiary Options

As mentioned above, the distribution options available to non-spouse beneficiaries were greatly limited after the passing of the SECURE ACT by Congress on December 19, 2019.  For most individuals that inherit retirement accounts after December 31, 2019, they will now be subject to the new "10 Year Rule" which requires non-spouse beneficiary to completely deplete the retirement account 10 years following the year of the decedents death.

For more on the this change and the options available to Non-Spouse beneficiaries in years 2020 and beyond, please read the article below: 

https://www.greenbushfinancial.com/new-rules-for-non-spouse-beneficiaries-of-retirement-accounts-starting-in-2020/ 

60 Day Rollover Mistake

There is a 60 day rollover rule that allows the owner of an IRA to take a distribution from an IRA and if the money is deposited back into the IRA within 60 days, it’s like the distribution never happened. Each taxpayer is allowed one 60 day rollover in a 12 month period.  Think of it as a 60 day interest free loan to yourself. 

Inherited IRA’s are not eligible for 60 day rollovers.  If money is distributed from the Inherited IRA, the rollover back into the IRA will be disallowed, and the individual will have to pay taxes on the amount distributed. 

 
 
Michael Ruger

About Michael……...

Hi, I’m Michael Ruger. I’m the managing partner of Greenbush Financial Group and the creator of the nationally recognized Money Smart Board blog . I created the blog because there are a lot of events in life that require important financial decisions. The goal is to help our readers avoid big financial missteps, discover financial solutions that they were not aware of, and to optimize their financial future.

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